What sort of libertarian are you?

Left-libertarians are libertarians that are more associated with the anti-authoritarian left than other libertarians. Left-libertarians can be
minarchists, but many are anarchists who are in alliance with the anarchist left. Left-libertarians are more critical of conservatism and corporatism
than most libertarians. They view libertarians in a hsitorical context that is interconnected with the history of the left.

Minarchists are libertarians who advocate a strictly limited government and usually a more decentralized form of it. Minarchists may vary in the
degree to which they think that government should be limited, although the bare bones position is essentially nothing more than police, courts and the
military. Minarchists tend to think that some minimum level of government is a necessary evil, or at least an inevitability. The contemporary
libertarian movement in America is dominantly minarchist, although it has had a long history of dialogue and debate between minarchist and anarchist
libertarians.

Minarchists are libertarians who advocate a strictly limited government and usually a more decentralized form of it. Minarchists may vary in the
degree to which they think that government should be limited, although the bare bones position is essentially nothing more than police, courts and the
military. Minarchists tend to think that some minimum level of government is a necessary evil, or at least an inevitability. The contemporary
libertarian movement in America is dominantly minarchist, although it has had a long history of dialogue and debate between minarchist and anarchist
libertarians.

Left-libertarians are libertarians that are more associated with the anti-authoritarian left than other libertarians. Left-libertarians can be
minarchists, but many are anarchists who are in alliance with the anarchist left. Left-libertarians are more critical of conservatism and corporatism
than most libertarians. They view libertarians in a hsitorical context that is interconnected with the history of the left.

Libertarian socialists are libertarians, often of an anarchist variety, who advocate some kind of voluntary socialism. They tend to differ from other
schools of socialism in various ways. The tradition of libertarian socialism has largely taken place in Europe.

Agorist
Agorists are market anarchists or anarcho-capitalists (often former anarcho-capitalists) who have moved in the direction of rejecting participation in
the political process in favor of more direct action in the form of economic secession and civil disobedience in general, with particular emphasis on
making use of black or grey markets. Agorism could be viewed as a radicalized version of anarcho-capitalism, or a radicalized outcome of taking it in
new directions. Agorists tend to be more closely associated with the traditional anarchist left than many anarcho-capitalists.

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